| PART 7
Chapter 13
 There are no conditions to which a man cannot become used,
 especially if he sees that all around him are living in the same
 way.  Levin could not have believed three months before that he
 could have gone quietly to sleep in the condition in which he was
 that day, that leading an aimless irrational life, living too
 beyond his means, after drinking to excess (he could not call
 what happened at the club anything else), forming inappropriately
 friendly relations with a man with whom his wife had once been in
 love, and a still more inappropriate call upon a woman who could
 only be called a lost woman, after being fascinated by that woman
 and causing his wife distress--he could still go quietly to
 sleep.  But under the influence of fatigue, a sleepless night,
 and the wine he had drunk, his sleep was sound and untroubled. At five o'clock the creak of a door opening waked him.  He jumped
 up and looked round.  Kitty was not in bed beside him.  But there
 was a light moving behind the screen, and he heard her steps. "What is it?...what is it?" he said, half-asleep.  "Kitty!
 What is it?" "Nothing," she said, coming from behind the screen with a candle
 in her hand.  "I felt unwell," she said, smiling a particularly
 sweet and meaning smile. "What? has it begun?" he said in terror.  "We ought to send..."
 and hurriedly he reached after his clothes. "No, no," she said, smiling and holding his hand.  "It's sure to
 be nothing.  I was rather unwell, only a little.  It's all over
 now." And getting into bed, she blew out the candle, lay down and was
 still.  Though he thought her stillness suspicious, as though she
 were holding her breath, and still more suspicious the expression
 of peculiar tenderness and excitement with which, as she came
 from behind the screen, she said "nothing," he was so sleepy that
 he fell asleep at once.  Only later he remembered the stillness
 of her breathing, and understood all that must have been passing
 in her sweet, precious heart while she lay beside him, not
 stirring, in anticipation of the greatest event in a woman's
 life.  At seven o'clock he was waked by the touch of her hand on
 his shoulder, and a gentle whisper.  She seemed struggling
 between regret at waking him, and the desire to talk to him. |